Gene/Protein
Disease
Symptom
Drug
Enzyme
Compound
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Gene/Protein
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Enzyme
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Target Concepts:
Gene/Protein
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Drug
Enzyme
Compound
Query: EC:3.1.3.9 (
glucose-6-phosphatase
)
3,081
document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)
Enzyme biochemical and histochemical assays during chemical carcinogenesis in rat liver have revealed that several adult enzyme activities are lost and some fetal enzyme activities are re-expressed in the hyperplastic foci as well as in the developed hepatomas. How these enzyme alterations are acquired and to what extent these changes are specifically related to the growth alterations leading to neoplastic development are decisive questions. Using a
carcinogenesis
protocol that combines a single dose of diethylnitrosamine and phenobarbital given continuously as the promoting agent and by assaying serial liver sections for
glucose-6-phosphatase
, adenosine-5'-triphosphatase and 5'-nucleotidase, we have identified the three-enzyme pattern of 1,746 islands and measured their section areas. We found a clear trend that clones with more deviated enzyme pattern grow faster than less deviated ones.
...
PMID:Enzyme pattern and growth rate of liver preneoplastic clones during carcinogenesis by diethylnitrosamine. 608 33
This study was undertaken to answer the following question. Is the phenotypic diversity that is characteristic of hepatocellular carcinomas acquired early during
carcinogenesis
, or is it more likely to be a property added late in the process? This question was posed using a new model for the sequential analysis of hepatocarcinogenesis. This model utilizes a single initiating dose of a carcinogen, such as diethylnitrosamine, followed by the selective stimulation of the rare, initiated hepatocyte to proliferate under conditions in which the proliferation of the majority of uninitiated hepatocytes is inhibited. Under these conditions, discrete early foci of altered hepatocytes and hyperplastic foci and nodules are quite well synchronized for about 10 to 12 cell cycles, after which the synchrony is progressively lost. As phenotypic expressions, cell proliferation, judged by radioautography after the administration of [3H]thymidine and the activities of four enzyme markers, two positive ones, gamma-glutamyltranspeptidase and DT-diaphorase, and two negative ones,
glucose-6-phosphatase
and adenosine triphosphatase, all judged histochemically, were used. At the earliest time of observation, 7 days, and at subsequent time points thereafter, all histologically recognizable foci and nodules showed variable degrees of staining for each enzyme activity. Prior to selection, gamma-glutamyltranspeptidase activity was much more consistent than was that of the others; however, during and after the selection, the four markers showed almost the same consistency among developing lesions. During the period of selection, between 80 and 90% of hepatocytes in the proliferating nodules were labeled with [3H]thymidine, while only an occasional labeled hepatocyte was seen in the foci prior to selection and in the nodules following selection. In the postselection period, the majority of nodules acquired the histochemical and architectural properties of normal liver, while a minority persisted as typical hyperplastic nodules. This study suggests that phenotypes of carcinogen-altered hepatocytes are variable, but whether the histochemical diversity among the lesions is merely due to environmental variation or is a reflection of a more basic genotypic variability remains a fundamental question.
...
PMID:Phenotypic diversity as an early property of putative preneoplastic hepatocyte populations in liver carcinogenesis. 611 Apr 77
The influence of sodium phenobarbital (PB) treatment on the sequence of N-nitrosomorpholine (NNM) induced focal preneoplastic lesions in the rat liver was investigated using a combined morphological and enzyme histochemical approach. Quantitative assessment of the different types of foci of altered hepatocytes visible in H&E sections after carcinogen application, namely the clear and acidophilic cell glycogen storage foci and mixed cell foci comprising glycogen storing cells and also more basophilic hepatocytes showing reduction in glycogen reserves, revealed a shift towards mixed cell character and greater size in PB-treated livers in comparison to those receiving NNM alone. Within the three dose levels of PB investigated (0.75, 0.075 or 0.0075 g/l drinking water) a clear dose dependence in appearance of mixed cell foci was apparent. Assessment of alterations in the activities of marker enzymes observed within preneoplastic foci was carried out by comparison of PAS preparations with sections reacted for glucose-6-phosphate dehydrogenase (G6PDH), gamma-glutamyl transpeptidase,
glucose-6-phosphatase
and adenosine triphosphatase. G6PDH proved the most consistent enzyme marker for small glycogen storage foci whereas larger foci of that type and mixed cell foci were associated with change in activity of all enzymes studied. The results are discussed in relation to the sequence of events occurring during hepatocarcinogenesis and the influence of PB on altered cellular populations. The applicability of enzyme markers is further considered in view of the question of heterogeneity within populations of preneoplastic foci.
Carcinogenesis
1983
PMID:Enhancement of NNM-induced carcinogenesis in the rat liver by phenobarbital: a combined morphological and enzyme histochemical approach. 613 86
Hepatocellular neoplasms are known to differ in enzyme activity from the surrounding non-neoplastic liver. We have compared histochemically the enzyme activity of spontaneous hepatocellular tumors in mice with tumors induced by diethylnitrosamine and dieldrin. Some neoplasms had increased activity, others had decreased enzyme activity, yet other had the same activity as the surrounding liver. Alkaline phosphatase,
glucose-6-phosphatase
, succinic dehydrogenase and adenosine triphosphatase, as well as glycogen levels were studied. Carcinomas differed from adenomas in having elevated enzyme activity significantly more often than adenomas. However, the carcinomas showed elevated glycogen levels less frequently than adenomas. Histochemically, pulmonary metastases resembled the primary hepatocellular carcinomas from which they were derived. Tumors of dieldrin animals were notable in having increased activity of all the enzymes which we studied more frequently than tumors of diethylnitrosamine animals or of controls. Differences in enzyme activity between the three mouse strains were slight.
Carcinogenesis
1982
PMID:Enzyme histochemical characteristics of spontaneous and induced hepatocellular neoplasms in mice. 629 95
The livers from a total of 51 Sprague-Dawley rats treated with different doses of N-nitrosomorpholine (80-120 mg/l in the drinking water) for up to 14 weeks together with the livers of 28 control animals were histochemically investigated at the cessation of carcinogenic insult and at varying periods thereafter for their glycogen content, basophilia and activities of various enzymes of carbohydrate metabolism: glycogen synthetase, glycogen phosphorylase,
glucose-6-phosphatase
, glyceraldehyde-3-phosphate dehydrogenase and glucose-6-phosphate dehydrogenase. The enzymatic patterns of normal tissue, preneoplastic and neoplastic lesions were characterized and compared with reference to the morphologically defined stages of tumor development in the liver. The early appearing glycogen storing areas, localized in the peripheral and intermediate lobular regions, did not show significant changes in the histochemically demonstrable activities of the enzymes tested. After cessation of the carcinogen treatment the more pronounced glycogen storage foci which developed within the aforementioned regions of the liver acinus usually showed a reduction in the activities of phosphorylase and
glucose-6-phosphatase
while the activity of glucose-6-phosphate dehydrogenase, a key enzyme for the pentose phosphate pathway, was increased. The mixed cell foci, neoplastic nodules and tumors which emerged at later stages were characterized by a progressive shift away from glycogen metabolism towards glycolysis and the pentose phosphate pathway, as indicated by an increase in glyceraldehyde-3-phosphate dehydrogenase and glucose-6-phosphate dehydrogenase activities. These changes in enzyme pattern are supportive of a developmental sequence leading from glycogen storage foci through mixed cell foci and neoplastic nodules to hepatocellular carcinomas.
Carcinogenesis
1982
PMID:Correlative histochemistry of some enzymes of carbohydrate metabolism in preneoplastic and neoplastic lesions in the rat liver. 629 53
Sprague-Dawley rats were treated with N-nitrosomorpholine (NNM) alone (7 weeks, 120 mg/l in drinking water), with NNM followed by phenobarbital (PB) (750 mg/l for 6 weeks) or PB alone. The livers from these animals were investigated for glycogen content and activities of
glucose-6-phosphatase
, glucose-6-phosphate dehydrogenase, glycogen phosphorylase and glycogen synthetase. The following parameters proved to be significantly altered in the livers of rats treated with either NNM or PB or both compared with untreated controls: glycogen content was increased and the activities of
glucose-6-phosphatase
and glycogen synthetase were decreased. Although these data show some similarities in changes of glycogen metabolism of livers treated with NNM or PB, earlier histochemical investigations revealed important differences in the distribution of these alterations within the liver parenchyma.
Carcinogenesis
1983
PMID:Influence of phenobarbital on glycogen metabolism of rat liver pretreated with N-nitrosomorpholine. 630 40
The hypothesis that during the promotion phase of
carcinogenesis
a second rare event leads to a promoter-independent tumour cell was tested in an initiation-promotion-initiation type of experiment. Precancerous (island) cells induced in rat liver by 10 mg/kg N-nitrosodiethylamine given 24 h after partial hepatectomy were promoted by a protocol consisting of 2-acetylaminofluorene/partial hepatectomy. Administration of 25-100 mg/kg N-ethyl-N-nitrosourea served as second initiater. Microscopic foci of neoplastic cells were observed within the precancerous islands 66 days later; no such foci were noted in the appropriate controls. Deficiency of adenosine triphosphatase and
glucose-6-phosphatase
marker enzymes in the foci was more pronounced than in the surrounding island cells; glycogen storage was decreased and cytoplasmic basophilia slightly increased; gamma-glutamyltranspeptidase staining was negative or decreased with respect to the surrounding island cells, which exhibited a partially positive reaction. We conclude that a secondary change produced by N-ethyl-N-nitrosourea in precancerous island cells leads to focus-forming cells which grow, in the absence of promoter, into foci of neoplastic phenotype. Similar rare, initiation-like events might be involved in the process of tumour promotion in general.
...
PMID:Initiation-promotion-initiation. Induction of neoplastic foci within islands of precancerous liver cells in the rat. 653 10
A comparative morphologic, morphometric and enzyme histochemical investigation of lesions induced by short-term application of N-nitrosomorpholine (NNM) and subsequent so-called 'selection pressure' was carried out in order to assess the characteristics of the numbers of induced putative preneoplastic populations and to cast light on reversibility associated with this model. The glycogen storage foci, mixed cell foci and neoplastic nodules observed after 'selection pressure' were in principle similar to those seen after stop experiments, although alterations in morphology and enzyme phenotype of individual cells were usually far more pronounced after short-term induction. It was established that 75% of the lesions were no longer visible 11 weeks after withdrawal of induction stimuli and that a large proportion of these remaining demonstrated heterogeneity in morphological and histochemical markers indicative of reversion to normal phenotype. After a further 10 weeks a slight increase in number of foci associated with decrease in size and enhanced homogeneity in phenotypic markers was established. The behaviour of foci and nodules undergoing reversion was considered with respect to changes in basophilia and glycogen storage and activity of the enzymes glucose-6-phosphate dehydrogenase,
glucose-6-phosphatase
, glyceraldehyde 3-phosphate dehydrogenase, glycogen phosphorylase and synthase, acid phosphatase and gamma-glutamyl transpeptidase and correlated with location of altered cellular populations within the liver functional acinus.
Carcinogenesis
1983
PMID:Phenotypic instability in focal and nodular lesions induced in a short term system in the rat liver. 685 Sep 91
Basophilic hepatic foci, nodules, and trabecular hepatocellular carcinomas, collectively referred to as focal hepatic lesions, were induced by single injections of 5.0 micrograms of diethylnitrosamine (DEN) per gram body weight in 15-day-old C57BL/6J X C3HeB/FeJ F1 (B6C3 F1) mice. Groups of eight experimental and eight control mice were killed at 3 days and at 1, 2, 4, 10, 20, 28, 36 and 41 weeks after injection. The only observable acute hepatic toxic effect of DEN, a mild steatosis, was noted at 3 days, but this had disappeared by 7 days following injection. Basophilic foci, composed entirely of altered hepatocytes, were first noted, when very small, at 10 weeks. At later times, some of the foci also contained small collections of proliferated ductules, apparently a result of secondary ingrowth from nearby interlobular bile ducts. The hepatocytes within basophilic foci were characterized by their abundant cytoplasmic RNA, a high nuclear to cytoplasmic ratio (two times greater than normal), which gave them a "crowded appearance," and decreased
glucose-6-phosphatase
activity. During the course of the study, basophilic foci appeared to increase in size and number. Cytologic anaplasia also became more evident, ultimately culminating in the development of typical trabecular hepatocellular carcinomas by 44 weeks. Invasion of hepatic veins by basophilic foci, first noted at 10 weeks, was prominent by 20 weeks and indicated that many of the lesions manifested this characteristic of malignancy well in advance of the anaplastic features that are also diagnostic of hepatocellular carcinoma. The high growth rates of basophilic foci were confirmed by their greatly increased 3H-thymidine labeling indices, which were 20 times greater than background hepatocytes at 20 weeks following DEN injection. Tumor progression during the course of the study was also suggested by a doubling of labeling indices of hepatocytes in the basophilic foci between 20 to 28 weeks. (The term tumor progression is used in a broad biological sense to encompass any or all of the qualitative and quantitative changes describing the stepwise development of initiated cells to highly malignant neoplasms. This definition differs from the more clinical usage which restricts the process to qualitative changes during the late stages in the development of fully autonomous neoplasms.) An analysis of the number and size of transections through basophilic foci and in some cases, actual reconstructions of the foci from serial sections, indicated that, in aggregate, they grew exponentially between 10 to 36 weeks, with a volume doubling time of 2.5 weeks. The combined morphologic and kinetic data support the view that trabecular hepatocellular carcinomas develop from basophilic foci. Because of their ease of quantitation on conventional H&E stained sections, their rather uniformly spherical shapes, and the high probability of their clonal origin, the induced focal hepatic lesions should provide a useful model for studying tumor growth kinetics during
carcinogenesis
.
...
PMID:Preneoplastic and neoplastic progression during hepatocarcinogenesis in mice injected with diethylnitrosamine in infancy. 687 10
Mouse renal cell tumors (RCTs) were induced in male CBA mice by 5 subcutaneous injections of 8 mg 1,2-dimethylhydrazine (DMH)/kg body weight once a week. After a lag period of 2 yr kidneys were removed, and serial cryostat sections of the kidneys were histochemically analyzed for the following parameters: glycogen content, basophilia, and the activities of glycogen synthase (SYN), glycogen phosphorylase (PHO),
glucose-6-phosphatase
(
G6Pase
), glucose-6-phosphate dehydrogenase (G6PDH), hexokinase (HK), pyruvate kinase (PK), lactate dehydrogenase (LDH), malic enzyme (ME), succinate dehydrogenase (SDH), alkaline phosphatase (ALPase) and gamma-glutamyltranspeptidase (GGT). RCTs displayed the same histochemical profile irrespective of their size and growth pattern. In comparison with the normal kidney epithelium, the neoplastic cells exhibited elevated activities of enzymes for glycolysis (HK, PK, LDH) and the pentose phosphate pathway (G6PDH), while negative
G6Pase
and low SDH activity were observed in these cells. The majority of RCTs showed high PHO activity and weak staining for SYN. Activities of ALPase and GGT were negative in most of the RCTs. Markedly enlarged cells with atypical nuclei were detected in some advanced RCTs. Higher activities of glycolytic and mitochondrial enzymes and G6PDH were found in these enlarged cells than in other tumor cells. Tubular preneoplastic lesions were similar to neoplastic lesions in morphological and histochemical characteristics. The present study revealed that a markedly elevated capacity for glycolysis and the pentose phosphate pathway occurred in RCTs in mice. A similar histochemical pattern in the few preneoplastic tubular lesions observed suggests that these metabolic aberrations emerge early during
carcinogenesis
, but additional studies on early stages of renal
carcinogenesis
are needed to substantiate this assumption.
...
PMID:Enzymic pattern of preneoplastic and neoplastic lesions induced in the kidney of CBA mice by 1,2-dimethylhydrazine. 781 30
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